by Jim Newton ; read by John H. Mayer ‧ RELEASE DATE: Oct. 4, 2011
Newton’s biography concentrates on Ike’s presidency, with a detailed, sympathetic, mostly evenhanded account. John Mayer’s likable voice matches the book’s sympathetic tone. His pacing, inflection, and matching of sense to word all seem natural; that is, skilled in a way that escapes notice. In quotations, he modulates his tone slightly to indicate an accent or the original speaker (if well known), a common-sense approach that he usually carries off unobtrusively and well. Occasionally, he strains a bit to add color or feeling to the text, or sounds a tad folksy, but those moments are fleeting. Part of the value of this book is its level of detail, but that can also render it dry. Mayer keeps the narration enjoyable.
Los Angeles Times editor at large Newton (Justice for All: Earl Warren and the Nation He Made, 2006) points out that every incoming president believes that the nation is in crisis, and few doubted this in 1953. The Korean War was entering its third year of bloody stalemate; communism seemed on the march abroad with McCarthy’s anticommunist hysteria spreading confusion at home. Within a year, the war had ended, McCarthy had self-destructed and Eisenhower—not Dulles, insists Newton—was conducting the Cold War with good sense. The author explains his lackluster performance on civil rights on the weak grounds that he was a man of his times with many segregationist friends and little sympathy for blacks. Yet, by the standards of today’s Republicans, Eisenhower was a liberal who accepted New Deal social programs, showed no interest in massive tax cuts and opposed America’s enemies while refusing to support a military buildup. Although contemporary observers described him as an amiable, inarticulate figurehead, his reputation has risen since.Pub Date: Oct. 4, 2011
Duration: 19 hrs
DD ISBN: 9780307940667
Publisher: Random House Audio
Review Posted Online: Jan. 22, 2026
by James A. Michener ; read by Alexander Adams ‧ RELEASE DATE: N/A
James Michener tells the real stories behind the man and his books. The recording is read with skill and consistency although the reader does little to enhance the robust, larger-than-life incidents related in the book. Due to the first-person narrative format, there is no opportunity for the narrator to change his voice. This makes some chapters monotonous as they go on and on in the typical Michener style. The listener may also become confused because the stories are not told chronologically. This is not a great choice for the audio format, but Michener fans may stick with it to the end.
Pub Date: N/A
Duration: 22 hrs
Publisher: Books on Tape
Review Posted Online: Jan. 22, 2026
by Gloria Steinem ; read by Gloria Steinem ‧ RELEASE DATE: N/A
Awards & Accolades
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In a quest for a sense of inner contentment and self-worth, Gloria Steinem brings the reader on a journey of investigation and discovery. Steinem reads the text herself in a straightforward and friendly, but not intimate, presentation which is so easy to listen to it invites repetition--thus ensuring the painless relearning of the lessons of the book. It's difficult to tell from the reading that this audiobook is abridged; each section can stand alone. Nonetheless, the listener wished the book were unabridged. Steinem left me wanting to learn more.
Pub Date: N/A
Duration: 3 hrs
Publisher: Dove Audio
Review Posted Online: Jan. 22, 2026
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